活动
傅高义教授公开讲座:「邓小平与中国外交」
2012年1月18日
下午四时三十分
香港中文大学行政楼地下祖尧堂
傅高义教授
(English version only)
Ezra F. Vogel is the Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences Emeritus at Harvard University. After graduating from Ohio Wesleyan in 1950 and serving two years in the US Army, he studied sociology in the Department of Social Relations at Harvard, receiving his PhD in 1958. He then went to Japan for two years to study the Japanese language and conduct research interviews with middle-class families. In 1960–1961 he was assistant professor at Yale University and from 1961 to 1964 a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard, studying Chinese language and history. He remained at Harvard, becoming lecturer in 1964 and, and in 1967, professor. He retired from teaching in 2000. After retirement he worked on a book, Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China, completed in 2011.
Vogel succeeded John Fairbank to become the second Director (1972–1977) of Harvard’s East Asian Research Center and Second Chairman of the Council for East Asian Studies (1977–1980). He was Director of the Program on US-Japan Relations at the Center for International Affairs (1980–1987) and, since 1987, Honorary Director. He was Chairman of the undergraduate concentration in East Asian Studies from its inception in 1972 until 1991. He was Director of the Fairbank Center (1995–1999) and the first Director of the Asia Center (1997–1999). He was Chairman of the Harvard Committee to Welcome President Jiang Zemin (1998). He taught courses on Japanese and Chinese societies and for many years a Core Curriculum course—Industrial East Asia.
Drawing on his original field work in Japan, he wrote Japan’s New Middle Class (1963). A book based on several years of interviewing and reading materials from China, Canton Under Communism (1969), won the Harvard University Press faculty book of the year award. The Japanese edition of his book Japan as Number One: Lessons for America (1979) is the all-time best-seller in Japan of non-fiction by a Western author. In Comeback (1988), he suggested things America might do to respond to the Japanese challenge. He spent eight months in 1987, at the invitation of the Guangdong Provincial Government, studying the progress of the province since it took the lead in economic reform in 1978. The results are reported in One Step Ahead in China: Guangdong Under Reform (1989). His Reischauer Lectures were published in The Four Little Dragons: The Spread of Industrialization in East Asia (1991). He updated his views on Japan in: Is Japan Still Number One? (2000). He has visited East Asia at least once a year since 1958 and has spent a total of over six years in Asia. He lectures often in Asia, in Chinese and Japanese. Since 2000 he has organized a series of conferences between Chinese, Japanese, and Western scholars to work together to examine the China War from 1937–1945.
Vogel has received ten honorary degrees. He received The Japan Foundation Prize in 1996 and the Japan Society Prize in 1998. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2008 he received the Harvard Graduate School Centennial Medal for contribution to society.
From 1993 to 1995, Vogel took a two-year leave of absence from Harvard to serve as the National Intelligence Officer for East Asia at the National Intelligence Council in Washington. He directed the American Assembly on China in November 1996 (Vogel, ed., Living With China) and the Joint Chinese-American Assembly between China and the United States in 1998. He served as Co-director of the Asia Foundation Task Force on East Asian Policy Recommendations for the New Administration (2001). He chairs the advisory board of the Universities Service Centre of China Studies of The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
He is married to Charlotte Ikels, professor of anthropology emeritus at Case Western University. His three children—David, Steven, and Eve—all teach at universities, respectively in psychology, political economy, and the environment.
费用全免
传讯及公共关系处
电话: 3943 8893
(English version only)
The lecture will examine how Deng’s experience in France (1920–25) and the Soviet Union (1926–27) shaped his later understanding of foreign developments. It traces Deng’s experience in dealing with the Communist Bloc (1952–66) and his experience in meeting leaders from other countries (1973–75). It will focus particularly on Deng’s relations with Japan, the US, and Southeast Asia in 1978 as he prepared for the policy of opening. It will give a brief account of Deng’s meeting with some of the leading foreigners beginning in 1978.